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Orthostatic headache

Orthostatic headache is a medical condition in which a person develops a headache while vertical and the headache is relieved when horizontal.[1][2] Previously it was often misdiagnosed as different primary headache disorders such as migraine or tension headaches. Increasing awareness of the symptom and its causes has prevented delayed or missed diagnosis.[3]

Orthostatic headache
Location of cerebral spinal fluid within the brain

Causes edit

The most common cause of orthostatic headache is low cerebrospinal fluid pressure, due to a cerebrospinal fluid leak, or a post-dural-puncture leak.[4] It is also occasionally the most prominent symptom of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS).[3] Distinguishing POTS from a cerebrospinal fluid leak can be difficult, because the defining symptom of POTS, positional tachycardia, also occurs in some people with cerebrospinal fluid leaks.[3] Furthermore, both POTS and cerebrospinal fluid leaks are sometimes present in the same person, especially in people with Ehlers–Danlos syndrome.[3]

Other causes include colloid cysts and possibly connective tissue disorders.[5] It may occur as a complication of decompressive surgery for Chiari malformation or decompressive craniectomies for cerebral edema.[5]

Mechanism edit

A cerebrospinal fluid leak causes loss of cerebrospinal fluid volume around the brain. This causes the brain to lose its buoyancy, which results in pressure on pain-sensitive areas like the dura and blood vessels. The resulting pain is a headache, and because the brain is more reliant on its buoyancy in an upright position the headache can be relieved by switching to a horizontal position.[3]

Diagnosis edit

Cerebrospinal fluid leaks are diagnosed by performing different tests. A diagnostic dural puncture is commonly used because its results show the presence of a leak easily. Other types of tests that could be used are cranial CT, cranial MRI, spinal MRI, and CT myelography. A cranial MRI can be diagnostic by showing one of the five main findings, which are subdural fluid collections, enhancement of venous structures, dural enhancement on MRI sagittal views,[6] pituitary hyperemia, and sagging of the brain.[3]

Another cause of orthostatic headaches is postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), a form of dysautonomia, which is diagnosed with autonomic testing instead of the imaging tests that are used to determine a CSF leak. It can be difficult to distinguish if a patient is solely affected by POTS because patients with CSF leaks have similar symptoms and may even develop secondary POTS.[3]

Management edit

Cerebrospinal Fluid leaks can be managed short term with bed rest and plentiful hydration. They can then be treated with an epidural blood patch (EBP) with autologous blood, which is the standard initial procedure. If an EBP is ineffective, surgery is also an option for treatment. A surgical procedure would be customized to the patient depending on the location and size of the leak.[3]

POTS patients manage their symptoms with medication, diet, and preventative behaviors. Drugs such as midodrine, fludrocortisone, droxidopa, and pyridostigmine are sometimes prescribed to help stabilize blood pressure. Patients can work with their diet to ensure they are getting the crucial amount of fluid intake and increasing their intake of salt. Both dietary changes can help prevent symptoms from occurring. Water-bolus treatment can help in times of increased orthostatic stress. Patients drink two 8 ounce glasses of cold water rapidly, which will increase standing blood pressure for a short amount of time.[7]

Outlook edit

Most orthostatic headaches have a favorable outcome.[3] POTS patients who manage their symptoms can recognize when their symptoms are occurring and prevent them from affecting their everyday life.[7] CSF leaks are usually repaired successfully with only about 10% of patients experiencing recurrence.[3]

Epidemiology edit

All different types of patients have presented orthostatic headaches as symptoms. It is slightly more prevalent in females, with a female-to-male ratio of 1.5:1. The average age of symptom presentation is around 40 years old; however, there have been cases with patients from all ages. CSF leaks are more common in patients that have connective tissue diseases such as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Mokri, B; Low, P. A. (2003). "Orthostatic headaches without CSF leak in postural tachycardia syndrome". Neurology. 61 (7): 980–2. doi:10.1212/01.wnl.0000085868.37963.7d. PMID 14557573. S2CID 28633454.
  2. ^ Oh, K; Chung, C. S.; Lee, S. J. (2001). "Orthostatic headache: An unusual presentation of a skull base tumour". Cephalalgia: An International Journal of Headache. 21 (10): 1000–1. doi:10.1046/j.1468-2982.2001.00289.x. PMID 11843875. S2CID 27514211.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Schievink, W. I., & Deline, C. R. (2014). "Headache secondary to intracranial hypotension". Current Pain and Headache Reports. 18 (457): 1–9. doi:10.1007/s11916-014-0457-9. PMID 25255993. S2CID 19577501.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Headache Classification Committee of the International Headache Society (2013). (PDF). Cephalalgia. 33 (9): 716–717. doi:10.1177/0333102413485658. PMID 23771276. S2CID 78846027. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-24. Retrieved 2015-04-27.
  5. ^ a b Mokri, B. (2013). "Spontaneous low pressure, low CSF volume headaches: spontaneous CSF leaks". Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain. 53 (7): 1034–1053. doi:10.1111/head.12149. PMID 23808630.
  6. ^ Citation: Gaillard, F., Baba, Y. Intracranial hypotension. Reference article, Radiopaedia.org. (accessed on 21 Oct 2021) https://doi.org/10.53347/rID-1519 DOI:https://doi.org/10.53347/rID-1519
  7. ^ a b Low, Phillip; Tomalia, Victoria (2015). "Orthostatic Hypotension: Mechanisms, Causes, Management". Journal of Clinical Neurology. 11 (3): 220–226. doi:10.3988/jcn.2015.11.3.220. PMC 4507375. PMID 26174784.

orthostatic, headache, medical, condition, which, person, develops, headache, while, vertical, headache, relieved, when, horizontal, previously, often, misdiagnosed, different, primary, headache, disorders, such, migraine, tension, headaches, increasing, aware. Orthostatic headache is a medical condition in which a person develops a headache while vertical and the headache is relieved when horizontal 1 2 Previously it was often misdiagnosed as different primary headache disorders such as migraine or tension headaches Increasing awareness of the symptom and its causes has prevented delayed or missed diagnosis 3 Orthostatic headacheLocation of cerebral spinal fluid within the brain Contents 1 Causes 2 Mechanism 3 Diagnosis 4 Management 5 Outlook 6 Epidemiology 7 ReferencesCauses editThe most common cause of orthostatic headache is low cerebrospinal fluid pressure due to a cerebrospinal fluid leak or a post dural puncture leak 4 It is also occasionally the most prominent symptom of postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome POTS 3 Distinguishing POTS from a cerebrospinal fluid leak can be difficult because the defining symptom of POTS positional tachycardia also occurs in some people with cerebrospinal fluid leaks 3 Furthermore both POTS and cerebrospinal fluid leaks are sometimes present in the same person especially in people with Ehlers Danlos syndrome 3 Other causes include colloid cysts and possibly connective tissue disorders 5 It may occur as a complication of decompressive surgery for Chiari malformation or decompressive craniectomies for cerebral edema 5 Mechanism editA cerebrospinal fluid leak causes loss of cerebrospinal fluid volume around the brain This causes the brain to lose its buoyancy which results in pressure on pain sensitive areas like the dura and blood vessels The resulting pain is a headache and because the brain is more reliant on its buoyancy in an upright position the headache can be relieved by switching to a horizontal position 3 Diagnosis editCerebrospinal fluid leaks are diagnosed by performing different tests A diagnostic dural puncture is commonly used because its results show the presence of a leak easily Other types of tests that could be used are cranial CT cranial MRI spinal MRI and CT myelography A cranial MRI can be diagnostic by showing one of the five main findings which are subdural fluid collections enhancement of venous structures dural enhancement on MRI sagittal views 6 pituitary hyperemia and sagging of the brain 3 Another cause of orthostatic headaches is postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome POTS a form of dysautonomia which is diagnosed with autonomic testing instead of the imaging tests that are used to determine a CSF leak It can be difficult to distinguish if a patient is solely affected by POTS because patients with CSF leaks have similar symptoms and may even develop secondary POTS 3 Management editCerebrospinal Fluid leaks can be managed short term with bed rest and plentiful hydration They can then be treated with an epidural blood patch EBP with autologous blood which is the standard initial procedure If an EBP is ineffective surgery is also an option for treatment A surgical procedure would be customized to the patient depending on the location and size of the leak 3 POTS patients manage their symptoms with medication diet and preventative behaviors Drugs such as midodrine fludrocortisone droxidopa and pyridostigmine are sometimes prescribed to help stabilize blood pressure Patients can work with their diet to ensure they are getting the crucial amount of fluid intake and increasing their intake of salt Both dietary changes can help prevent symptoms from occurring Water bolus treatment can help in times of increased orthostatic stress Patients drink two 8 ounce glasses of cold water rapidly which will increase standing blood pressure for a short amount of time 7 Outlook editMost orthostatic headaches have a favorable outcome 3 POTS patients who manage their symptoms can recognize when their symptoms are occurring and prevent them from affecting their everyday life 7 CSF leaks are usually repaired successfully with only about 10 of patients experiencing recurrence 3 Epidemiology editAll different types of patients have presented orthostatic headaches as symptoms It is slightly more prevalent in females with a female to male ratio of 1 5 1 The average age of symptom presentation is around 40 years old however there have been cases with patients from all ages CSF leaks are more common in patients that have connective tissue diseases such as Ehlers Danlos syndrome 3 References edit Mokri B Low P A 2003 Orthostatic headaches without CSF leak in postural tachycardia syndrome Neurology 61 7 980 2 doi 10 1212 01 wnl 0000085868 37963 7d PMID 14557573 S2CID 28633454 Oh K Chung C S Lee S J 2001 Orthostatic headache An unusual presentation of a skull base tumour Cephalalgia An International Journal of Headache 21 10 1000 1 doi 10 1046 j 1468 2982 2001 00289 x PMID 11843875 S2CID 27514211 a b c d e f g h i j k Schievink W I amp Deline C R 2014 Headache secondary to intracranial hypotension Current Pain and Headache Reports 18 457 1 9 doi 10 1007 s11916 014 0457 9 PMID 25255993 S2CID 19577501 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Headache Classification Committee of the International Headache Society 2013 The International Classification of Headache Disorders 3rd edition beta version PDF Cephalalgia 33 9 716 717 doi 10 1177 0333102413485658 PMID 23771276 S2CID 78846027 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 24 Retrieved 2015 04 27 a b Mokri B 2013 Spontaneous low pressure low CSF volume headaches spontaneous CSF leaks Headache The Journal of Head and Face Pain 53 7 1034 1053 doi 10 1111 head 12149 PMID 23808630 Citation Gaillard F Baba Y Intracranial hypotension Reference article Radiopaedia org accessed on 21 Oct 2021 https doi org 10 53347 rID 1519 DOI https doi org 10 53347 rID 1519 a b Low Phillip Tomalia Victoria 2015 Orthostatic Hypotension Mechanisms Causes Management Journal of Clinical Neurology 11 3 220 226 doi 10 3988 jcn 2015 11 3 220 PMC 4507375 PMID 26174784 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orthostatic headache amp oldid 1218180316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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